4.6 Article

Intravital imaging of osteocyte integrin dynamics with locally injectable fluorescent nanoparticles

Journal

BONE
Volume 174, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.bone.2023.116830

Keywords

Osteocyte; Fluorescent probes; Integrins; Multiphoton microscopy; Intravital imaging

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Osteocytes, as the resident mechanosensory cells in bone, play a crucial role in skeletal homeostasis and adaptation. This study demonstrates the usage of ultra-small and bright C'Dots as a novel in vivo imaging tool for osteocytes, which improves intravital imaging capabilities. It reveals distinct sex differences in nanoparticle intracellular dynamics and clearance in osteocytes and provides the first evidence of osteocyte integrin endocytosis and recycling in vivo. The results offer novel insights in osteocyte biology and open up new lines of investigation previously unavailable in vivo.
Osteocytes are the resident mechanosensory cells in bone. They are responsible for skeletal homeostasis and adaptation to mechanical cues. Integrin proteins play a prominent role in osteocyte mechanotransduction, but the details are not well stratified. Intravital imaging with multiphoton microscopy presents an opportunity to study molecular level mechanobiological events in vivo and presents an opportunity to study integrin dynamics in osteocytes. However, fluorescent imaging limitations with respect to excessive optical scattering and low signal to noise ratio caused by mineralized bone matrix make such investigations non-trivial. Here, we demonstrate that ultra-small and bright fluorescent core-shell silica nanoparticles (<7 nm diameter), known as Cornell Prime Dots (C'Dots), are well-suited for the in vivo bone microenvironment and can improve intravital imaging capabilities. We report validation studies for C'Dots as a novel, locally injectable in vivo osteocyte imaging tool for both non-specific cellular uptake and for targeting integrins. The pharmacokinetics of C'Dots reveal distinct sex differences in nanoparticle intracellular dynamics and clearance in osteocytes, which represents a novel topic of study in bone biology. Integrin-targeted C'Dots were used to study osteocyte integrin dynamics. To the best of our knowledge, we report here the first evidence of osteocyte integrin endocytosis and recycling in vivo. Our results provide novel insights in osteocyte biology and will open up new lines of investigation that were previously unavailable in vivo.

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